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PUBLIC RADIO'S MARKETPLACE COMMENTARIES:
Bush’s Health Care Plan Deserves One Cheer, but One Cheer Only
Robert B. Reich
Marketplace, January 24, 2007
The President’s health-care proposal deserves one cheer for the following
reason: It potentially de-couples health care from employment.
Under his proposal, everyone would be eligible for a tax deduction for health
insurance up to $15,000 per family, $7,500 for a single person – regardless
of whether the insurance is provided by the employer or purchased elsewhere.
And there would no longer be any advantage to getting it at work because employer-paid
premiums would be included in taxable income.
Get it? With this plan, you can just about kiss employer-provided health insurance
good-bye.
And good riddance. It’s the biggest tax break in the whole federal tax
system, costing the Treasury some $130 billion a year. But you’re not
eligible for it when you and your family are most likely to need it – when
you lose your job, for example. And the biggest beneficiaries are upper-income
employees. The lower your pay, the less likely you are to get any employer
coverage at all.
The current employer-based system doesn’t cover the self-employed – the
largest and fastest-growing category of worker. And it creates perverse incentives.
It encourages employers to seek out young, healthy employees who are unlikely
to have health problems; reject older ones; and push married employees onto
their spouse’s employer’s plans.
The President’s plan to de-couple health insurance from employment merits
only one cheer, though, because it’s only the first step. Two cheers
for the President or any politician who comes up with a way to get health insurance
to lower-income people who can’t afford it on their own even with a tax
deduction. It’s called universal health care. Every advanced nation has
it except the United States.
The President punts on universal health care – putting the responsibility
for America’s 47 million uninsured on the states. But state government
budgets are already sagging under the weight of paying half the costs of Medicaid.
The only way lower-income families will get the preventive care they need is
through federally-subsidized health insurance. It’s a good investment
over the long term. Preventive care will lower the nation’s overall health
care tab because it will mean fewer expensive trips to emergency rooms by people
with health crises that could have been caught and averted earlier.
Finally, three cheers for the politician who bypasses America’s inefficient
private insurance market and establishes a single payer that provides all Americans
with health insurance just as good as the health insurance their representatives
in Congress receive free of charge. Note I said single payer, not single provider.
Americans want to keep their choice of doctor and hospital. But a single payer – either
through Medicare or the federal employee’s health insurance program – would
avoid the current insanity by which private insurers spend hundreds of millions
of dollars a year advertising and marketing to younger and healthier beneficiaries,
and seeking to discourage older and riskier ones, or people with pre-existing
medical conditions. America now has the only health-insurance system in the
world designed to avoid sick people.
President Bush isn’t running again but the one cheer he deserves marks
the start of the 2008 presidential race. Affordable health care will be the
biggest domestic issue in the upcoming election. The candidate who gets three
cheers on this will be our next President.
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